I read a couple of promising debuts this month:
Animosity (Aftershock), Kingsway West (Dark Horse), and Image published new
books from Hickman and Brubaker.
The Suicide Squad movie was released, I’ve
not been overly thrilled with comic flicks this year (no, not even Deadpool),
so wouldn’t you know it, the worst of the bunch was the one I was most
entertained by. If that doesn’t make a lick of sense, you can see my reasons
why here... Letterboxd (funny, I forgot to mention Flag in that write-up, but
then I always forget Flag. Even in the pages of a comic he rarely interested
me)
Continuing with DC: Rebirth is selling well
and seems to have made fans happy. But I’ve found most of the stories lacking,
and only a handful of titles remain in my pulls list.
Marvel continues to shine in spots. Even if
I’m not digging the event tie-ins, I still have ace titles to look forward to
each month, like Gwenpool, Black Widow, Moon Girl and Ant-Man. Plus, the new Amazing Spider-Man
arc started off with a bang.
12.
Lazarus #24 (Image)
Written by Greg Rucka
Art by Michael Lark * Colors by Santi Arcas
The Cull continues as another family bites
the dust and Forever gets closer to discovering the truth of her existence. Good
tale, if a bit repetitive as it goes through the same motions of the previous
issue.
11. Red Hood and the Outlaws #1 (DC)
Written by Scott Lobdell
Art by Dexter Soy * Colors by Veronica
Gandini
Hate on Lobdell all you want, but there’s no denying he writes a
damn good Hood! (Ok, you can deny that, but I’ll argue tooth and nail). Scott’s
taking his time on this one: of Jason’s team-mates, only Artemis has shown up
(and that was at the tail end of the issue), but both this and the Rebirth
issue have set up an intensely interesting, street level undercover story, with
Black Mask the primary foe (oh, I do so hope Kitty makes a guest appearance
soon)
10. Tomboy #7 (Action Lab)
Written by Mia Goodwin
Art and Colors by Michelle Wong
We see some significant changes in the aftermath of last month's masterpiece: Gramps shows he's more than a little psycho, and Addison's spirit guides... well, I wont spoil that. I still can't figure out the angel of death thing and what that's all about, but she's taken notice of Addison's actions and is on the move. Intriguing tale, good character piece. This series has really heated up of late.
10. Tomboy #7 (Action Lab)
Written by Mia Goodwin
Art and Colors by Michelle Wong
We see some significant changes in the aftermath of last month's masterpiece: Gramps shows he's more than a little psycho, and Addison's spirit guides... well, I wont spoil that. I still can't figure out the angel of death thing and what that's all about, but she's taken notice of Addison's actions and is on the move. Intriguing tale, good character piece. This series has really heated up of late.
9. The Wicked + The Divine #22 (Image)
Written by Kieron Gillen
Art by Jamie McKelvie * Colors by Matthew Wilson
An explosive end to the arc… literally! This
series has always kept readers off balance, changing the game and the players
at the snap of a finger, and this issue was no different. Who knows where we
are going from here, but there’s the suggestion that something wicked this way
comes.
8. Spider-Gwen #11 (Marvel)
Written by Jason Latour
Art by Robbi Rodriguez * Colors by Lauren
Affe
Odd to see someone other than Rico color
Robbi’s art; Affe’s not as neon psychedelic, but it’s not bad and the story was
amaze-balls. Gwen is coming through her dark night of the soul with a little
help from Reed Richards. This superb character study sets the table nicely for
her confrontation with Frank Castle (who I’ve come to hate. He’s the perfect
foil for her: She, the superhero who is seen by many as the baddie. He, the cop
hero who has lost his mind to obsession and become the villain)
7. Hellblazer #1 (DC)
Written by Simon Oliver
Art by Moritat * Colors by Andre
Szymanowicz
Many laughs in this one, John and Swampy are
great together. There were several British references that I had to look up
(which is a good thing). Mercury’s harangue we've heard a thousand times over,
but mostly I liked the issue, liked the way the twin stories were set-up.
6. House of Penance #5 (Dark Horse)
Written by Peter J. Tomasi
Art by Ian Burtram * Colors by Dave Stewart
An anti-gun message and the consequences of
colonization are all present in this twisted, Lovecraftian nightmare. At first
I thought Sarah Winchester was simply haunted and mad... but it appears the
horrors of her mind have manifested themselves and entered the world of the
real. Peter J. Tomasi has never written anything finer.
5. Black Monday Murders #1 (Image)
Written by Jonathan Hickman
Art by Tomm Coker * Colors by Michael Garland
I
don’t know when I’ve ever been more bewildered, while still being impressed by
a comic. The subject of Wall-Street and finance has seldom interested me, but
detectives and weirdness do. And while it’s a long, difficult read, it’s a
rewarding one if you can focus and stick with it.
4. The
Vision #10 (Marvel)
Written by Tom King
Art by Gabriel Hernandez Walta * Colors by
Jordie Bellaire
Virginia
playing a piano that can’t play is chilling, Vision tossing an empty oil can
into the garbage is telling, and praying for a dead relative has rarely come
off so heartbreaking and yet, so pointless, because it’s an impression of flesh
and blood. This is not who you are, it’s what your pretending to be. Its
existential displacement at its bleakest -- However, at the end, it looks like
Vision isn’t ‘pretending’ any more.
3. Trees #14 (Image)
Written by Warren Ellis
Art and Colors by Jason Howard
The series makes its return and with it comes several characters not
seen since the first arc. The comic is as smart and sinister as ever, but I
don’t know whose more frightening, the trees or the bureaucrats.
2. Kill or be Killed #1 (Image)
Written by Ed Brubaker
Art by Sean Phillips * Colors by Elizabeth Breitwesier
It’s Bru, Phillips and Breitwiser, so of course it’s exceptional. It
also took an unexpected turn midway through. If Fatale was Lovecraft blended
with Pulp Noir, then KobK –at first blush- is Death Wish filtered through
Stephen King.
1.
East of West #29 (Image)
Written
by Jonathan Hickman
Art
by Nick Dragotta * Colors by Frank Martin
A father and son reunion! We waited years
for this and it does not disappoint. Dragotta
draws some heart stopping pages and I like how it ends with a callback to the
first issue.
Honorable Mentions: Miss Fury #5, Green Arrow #4, Future Quest #4, Unbelievable Gwenpool #5, Black Widow #6, Moon
Girl and Devil Dinosaur #10, The Astonishing Ant-Man #11, All-New Wolverine Annual #1 (with guest star Spider-Gwen)
Writer of the Month:
Jonathan Hickman had a huge month, with an
important issue of East of West and the debut of the Black Monday Murders
Artist of the Month:
Gabriel Hernandez Walta & Jordie Bellaire (Vision)
brought so
much soul to the story and these characters
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